How Did We Get Here? The History of iframe seamless Told Through Tweets
My name is Nicky and I am a graphic designer. I have spent the last fifteen years studying psychology, learning about the human mind, and trying to figure out how to put my theory into practice.
Yes, I know exactly what you’re saying. You’re right about the fact that many of your actions and reactions are on autopilot. If I had to explain how to put my theory into practice, I’d put myself out there with the help of a little art teacher. What I don’t know is why you want to take on this job so many years ago.
I will admit, I’m a bit slow at figuring out how to implement this stuff. But one thing that I do know is that I get so worked up about what I’m doing that I don’t know if it’s worth it. I have a list of things I need to do to give myself some time at work. And a list of things I should do to get to work soon.
The Iframe seamless thing. This is actually the most useful part of the video I watched though. How do you use this? Well, you give your video a “frame” and then when it loads, it automatically loads into a new tab of the browser. Kind of like a window. But it works a little differently. Instead of a frame, you give it an iframe.
The iframe seamless thing is pretty cool, but I worry that it’s a very blunt tool. It means that I’m basically creating a page that loads in a new window, and I’m not always sure where I want it to go. I think I’ll just try it out for now and if it has any value at all, I’ll let you know.
This is one of those situations where I feel like I don’t know very much about this. If you say “iframe seamless” to a video player, does that mean that the video player actually loads a frame and then loads into a new tab? I guess we don’t know that. Or do I have to say “iframe seamless” to a page? If that’s the case, I don’t really know what to say.
Ill just try it out for now and if it has any value at all, Ill let you know.
In theory, you can load a webpage into an iframe. The browser sends a request to the parent page with the iframe in it, and then uses the parent’s iframe to load the webpage. The parent page can then handle all the page content just like if the parent was on a regular computer.
For the web, you can imagine that if you loaded a webpage into an iframe, you could make a webpage without any code or images. If you could make a webpage without any images, you could run it on a computer that wasn’t in use, like in your bedroom. But with an iframe, you can’t run the webpage off of a computer that isn’t in use. There’s no other way to make a webpage without images.
The fact that you could make a webpage without images is a big deal because it means that you can use the iframe technology to load pages into your browser that have images. These pages could be any kind of webpage you wanted to load. For example, if you wanted to load a webpage called “google.com” into your browser, you could use an iframe to make it a webpage called “google.com.” Then you could load “google.